|
- verbs - log in to or log into or login to - English Language . . .
As for “Log in to host com” versus “Log into host com,” I would use the former because I think that “log in” is a fixed phrase Martha’s answer to another question is also related Added : The Corpus of Contemporary American English (COCA) lists 65 occurrences of “log in to” and 58 occurrences of “log into,” both including
- What is the difference between log in, sign in; register, sign up; log . . .
log in, sign in, login, log on, logon, authenticate All of these words are more-or-less synonyms "Login" "logon" may or may not be acceptable (check your style guide) If they are, they may be nouns instead of verbs (referring to the action of logging in or the state of being logged in)
- When log is written without a base, is the equation normally referring . . .
$\log (x)$ refers to $\log_2 (x)$ in computer science and information theory $\log(x)$ refers to $\log_e(x)$ or the natural logarithm in mathematical analysis, physics, chemistry, statistics, economics, and some engineering fields $\log(x)$ refers to $\log_{10}(x)$ in various engineering fields, logarithm tables, and handheld calculators
- Logged-in, log-ined, login-ed, logined, log-in-ed, logged in?
@Paul: As the past tense of the verb, it would be logged in, as in I logged in this morning As an adjectival phrase, it could be either logged in or logged-in, typically depending on placement, e g
- Taylor Series for $\\log(x)$ - Mathematics Stack Exchange
$\begingroup$ @Kurtoid No because when you plug in $1-x$ into the alternating sign expansions, for odd exponents a negative sign is introduced, for evens nothing changes, so $\log(1-x)$ is simply just $-x - \frac{x^2}2 - \frac{x^3}3 - \dots$ $\endgroup$
- The difference between log and ln - Mathematics Stack Exchange
$\begingroup$ Since the default base of log can vary between and even within fields, seems a good rule of thumb is to treat ln as loge (of course), and log as unknown (re: base-2 10 e whatever) until you confirm the context If calculating or programming, check a test result before making assumptions
- Dividing logs with same base - Mathematics Stack Exchange
Dividing logs which have the same base changes the base of the log That is $\frac {\log a}{\log b} = \log_b a$ It doesn't matter what base we were using on the left hand side It will change the base of the log as above $\frac {\log 125}{\log 25} = \log_{25} 125$ and $25^{\frac 32} = 125$
- Intuition behind logarithm inequality: $1 - \\frac1x \\leq \\log x . . .
Stack Exchange Network Stack Exchange network consists of 183 Q A communities including Stack Overflow, the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge, and build their careers
- Interpretation of log differences - Mathematics Stack Exchange
I have a very simple question I am confused about the interpretation of log differences Here a simple example: $$\log(2)-\log(1)= 3010$$ With my present understanding, I would interpret the result as follows: the number $2$ is $30,10\%$ greater than $1,$ which is obviously false Can anyone lead me to the right interpretation? Thanks
|
|
英文每年常用名排名 2023 年排名 2022 年排名 2021 年排名 2020 年排名 2019 年排名 2018 年排名 2017 年排名 2016 年排名 2015 年排名 2014 年排名 2013 年排名 2012 年排名 2011 年排名 2010 年排名 2009 年排名 2008 年排名 2007 年排名 2006 年排名 2005 年排名 2004 年排名 2003 年排名 2002 年排名 2001 年排名 2000 年排名
英文名字起源
希伯来 希腊 条顿 印度 拉丁 拉丁语 古英语 英格兰 阿拉伯 法国 盖尔 英语 匈牙利 凯尔特 西班牙 居尔特 非洲 美洲土著 挪威 德国 威尔士 斯拉夫民族 古德语 爱尔兰 波斯 古法语 盎格鲁撒克逊 意大利 盖尔语 未知 夏威夷 中古英语 梵语 苏格兰 俄罗斯 土耳其 捷克 希腊;拉丁 斯干那维亚 瑞典 波兰 乌干达 拉丁;条顿 巴斯克语 亚拉姆 亚美尼亚 斯拉夫语 斯堪地纳维亚 越南 荷兰
|